NEWS
VIDEO'S
F1 STANDING
F1 SCHEDULE
F1 TEAMS
F1 DRIVERS
en
Login
en
Login
Close panel
PODCAST
VIDEO'S
F1 STANDINGS
F1 SCHEDULE
F1 TEAMS
F1 DRIVERS
en
FORMULA 1
LEWIS HAMILTON
RUMOURS
Psteckler
+0
Laatste reacties
+0
Psteckler
I doubt Porsche would supply the transmission if they partnered with Red Bull in F1. First of all because Red Bull makes their own F1 spec transmissions already. Also the double clutch transmissions used in Porsche and Audi road cars have no relevance to F1. Double clutch transmissions are not allowed in F1 plus they are too heavy. F1 teams instead use very complex seamless shift transmission which is just as fast but also much lighter. Teams tend to keep their transmission technology very secretive but I’m sure Red Bull has one of the better ones. I’m also very excited to see Porsche join F1 as an engine provider in 2026. It makes sense because F1 is pushing towards using biofuels and Porsche has invested heavily in biofuels for their future cars already.
13-12-2020 14:24
Load more...
Rumors
More Rumors
Does this constitute proof that Verstappen is better than Senna and Schumacher?
14
F1 Today | F1 mourns the passing of Eddie Jordan, Hamilton on his team radio
0
Coulthard shares emotional tribute to Eddie Jordan: 'A gift to F1'
1
Hill: 'Formidable Verstappen can never be discounted'
1
Popular on GPBlog
MOST READ
MOST COMMENTS
1
F1 LIVE | Follow FP2 for the Japanese Grand Prix here
1745 times read
2
F1 Full Results | Japanese Grand Prix FP2: Piastri P1, Norris P2
1393 times read
3
Mercedes breaks F1 rule ahead of Japanese Grand Prix weekend
973 times read
4
Full FP1 Results: Russell dominates while Norris struggles and Tsunoda keeps up with Verstappen
885 times read
+0
Psteckler
I doubt Porsche would supply the transmission if they partnered with Red Bull in F1. First of all because Red Bull makes their own F1 spec transmissions already. Also the double clutch transmissions used in Porsche and Audi road cars have no relevance to F1. Double clutch transmissions are not allowed in F1 plus they are too heavy. F1 teams instead use very complex seamless shift transmission which is just as fast but also much lighter. Teams tend to keep their transmission technology very secretive but I’m sure Red Bull has one of the better ones. I’m also very excited to see Porsche join F1 as an engine provider in 2026. It makes sense because F1 is pushing towards using biofuels and Porsche has invested heavily in biofuels for their future cars already.13-12-2020 14:24